http://www-robot.mes.titech.ac.jp/robot/snake/sg/sg_e.html
Yes, it’s great, really clever etc, but isn’t the photo with the little kid just a leetle disturbing?
http://www-robot.mes.titech.ac.jp/robot/snake/sg/sg_e.html
Yes, it’s great, really clever etc, but isn’t the photo with the little kid just a leetle disturbing?
Now that’s a picture that’s begging to be Photoshopped.
Now where’s Tentacle Monster?
Surely he’d be one to appreciate a Tentacle Robot!
That does not make any sense to me at all. It’s a bike chain that grabs pinto beans? And why is that child flashing a peace sign?
Snerk!!
The kid is obviously a fan of World War II, and is pretending he’s Churchill.
As for the explanation, I’ve found that whenever I don’t understand what’s going on in anime, the best thing to do is to call in Guinastasia for an explanation. This is clearly a new experiment, combining the Japanese concepts of giant robots grasping things and tentacle porn, but it no doubt has an explanation. “Send for Gundam Wing!” says our small Japanese Churchill!
BTW, and almost as scary: I did not download kanji support (or whatever it is that MSIE tries to download at you when you connect to a Japanese website, and my MSIE button linking to that site says “[e] HIRYUU” :eek:
Too many sharp corners.
Just be glad there was no Justhink Technology involved;)
[sub]No disrespect meant, my friend, but you really ought to try out - if you can - Firefox. Aeons better than IE.[/sub]
Who me? I’m not anime expert.
I. Love. It.
The text is nearly poetic, with its talk of “bending moments” and its gentle admonition that “However, using countless motors cannot be done.”
My favorite part, of course, is the use of a cute little boy as an example of an “optionally-shaped object.” Yeah, with enough horsepower applied, I imagine he can be any shape you want.
The boy in the picture is not flashing a peace sign. He’s indicating the number of his accomplices in a way that does not require him to exhale.